Pubdate: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 Source: Bonnyville Nouvelle (CN AB) Copyright: 2003 Bonnyville Nouvelle Contact: http://www.bonnyvillenouvelle.awna.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2369 SUBSTANCE ABUSE GOES WELL BEYOND THE HARD DRUGS The packed room at the Bonnyville Senior Citizen's Drop-In Centre was a good start to dealing with the drug abuse situation affecting the community. But any effort to reduce the prevalence of drugs like crystal meth in the community has to address the entire spectrum of substance abuse because the moment you allow exceptions, you start creating loopholes in logic. The message got through to those in the audience -- if you're going to get to the root of the problem of crystal meth in Bonnyville, you can't ignore other substance abuse issues, including smoking and alcohol and the ongoing normalization of marijuana. That, more than anything, will be the toughest obstacle of any zero tolerance on drug use, especially in this town. As one of the meeting attendees pointed out, few events happen without alcohol available and this area has the highest incidence of tobacco-related diseases in Alberta. Cigarettes and alcohol are just a different part of the substance abuse spectrum. Cigarettes and alcohol strengthen the myth of temporary consequence, that the only real impacts are a nicotine fit or a hangover and then everything else returns to normal. It leads to a false sense of security, that the consequences of the use of marijuana, crystal meth or ecstacy are just as fleeting. The trouble is, when they realize that's not the case, then it's too late. Parents have to stop thinking it couldn't possibly happen to them. Given the statistics on alcohol and drug experimentation and use by teens, it's more likely that your child has had some experience with cigarettes, alcohol, marijuana or the harder chemical drugs than not. If you include them or their circle of friends, then it's a virtual certainty. Instead of assuming their children don't have a drug problem, more progress might be made if they assumed their children have had some experience with drugs and then go from there. Parents do more harm by enabling their children's drug use or by refusing to accept it could possibly happen, thinking it might be a reflection on their parenting abilities. That, and the do as I say, not as I do mentality do more to entrench drug use in youth than anything else. Change that and you'll make the biggest impact [on] youth themselves, not through youth groups or special interest groups, but through the mainstream. They need to treat drug and alcohol use as uncool. If someone shows up to a Rock Jam drunk or high, the rest needs to reject the practice. The meeting was an important first step in a journey that is far more wide reaching than most people are aware of. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake